I'm just a simple man screaming into the abyss

Joined February 2016
32 Photos and videos
Matt Chamberlain retweeted
Dad buys Bitcoin for $100K. It grows to $5M. If he sells, he owes tax on a $4.9M gain. Instead, he puts it in a trust. Borrows against it. Lives tax-free. Dies holding. Kids inherit at a $5M basis. IRS gets $0.
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Matt Chamberlain retweeted
Bills fans will be arguing those screen grabs for eternity Presented by @chevrolet #ad #Chevy #Silverado
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This is very dumb
It’s not being talked about enough how ridiculous it is that Xavier Lucas has to sit out the first half of the title game because he tried to tackle the lower body of a receiver being led into him by his QB as the WR twisted his body down into his helmet.
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Matt Chamberlain retweeted
25 Feb 2025
been waiting for someone to combined the Patrick Bateman business card scene from “American Psycho” with LinkedIn profiles
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Man of your word, good work @elonmusk
29 Apr 2022
Replying to @wholemars
I try not to pick fights, but I do finish them
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Again
10 Aug 2024
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Matt Chamberlain retweeted
Jake Paul VS. Mike Tyson 🤬🥊
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Matt Chamberlain retweeted
Worlds most advanced AI has run the Tyson/Paul fight 10^75 times and has this as the outcome.
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Matt Chamberlain retweeted
6 Nov 2024
THE INTERNET IS WILD 💀💀💀

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Matt Chamberlain retweeted
6 Nov 2024
Think about this If Trump won in 2020, he would’ve had a Democrat House and Senate More impeachments, no Senate confirmations, no bills passed, and possibly the end of the MAGA movement as an effective political force But now? He has the House, Senate, Supreme Court, a popular vote mandate, and an entire country that wants to clean up our elections, close our borders, deport illegals, and hold corrupt politicians accountable Sometimes I think it had to happen this way
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Chamberlain @Matt_DriveSlow · 35m Yes we are fat, yes there were no muskets, yes we just rolled up to voting booths and then grabbed a sandwich. But we just won our generations revolutionary war. The Republic lives on. #trump
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Matt Chamberlain retweeted
6 Nov 2024
Let that sink in
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Matt Chamberlain retweeted
6 Nov 2024
“This is very much an election about the Global World Order.” - MSNBC You bet your ass it is. It’s over.
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Matt Chamberlain retweeted
When you use AI to replace every mention of "our democracy" with "our bureaucracy," everything starts making a lot more sense.
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Matt Chamberlain retweeted
Replying to @Sarah_Katilyn
Got my sticker.
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Great message from Jameis about Watson
Powerful: Jameis Winston on Deshaun Watson. A must-watch and listen.
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Try to find @DaveChappelle SNL monologue from 2 years ago about Kanye, Trump, etc. Look at what is presented to you in the results. You'll find it, but it won't be easy.
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Matt Chamberlain retweeted
People need to stop overreacting about Kamala’s plan to reduce food inflation, as if it would lead to communism, mass starvation, and the end of America. I worked in M&A in the food industry. Here’s a step-by-step summary of what would actually happen: 1. The government announces that grocery retailers aren’t allowed to raise prices. 2. Grocery stores, which operate on 1-2% net margins, can’t survive if their suppliers raise prices. So the government announces that food producers (Kraft Heinz, ConAgra, Tyson, Hormel, et. al.) also aren’t allowed to raise prices. 3. Not all grocery stores are created equal. Stores in lower-income areas make less money than those in higher-income areas, as the former disproportionately sell lower-margin prepackaged foods (“center of the store”) instead of higher-margin fresh products like meat (“perimeter of the store”). Because stores in lower-income areas aren’t able to cover overhead (remember, even if their wholesale costs are fixed, their labor, utilities, insurance, and other operating expenses aren’t fixed… yet), grocery chains start to shut them down. Food deserts in rural areas and in low-income urban areas alike become worse. 4. Meanwhile, margins for food producers are also quickly eroding. Their primary costs (ingredients, energy, and labor) aren’t fixed, and their shrinking gross profits leave less cash flow available to cover overhead, maintain facilities, and reinvest in additional production capacity. 5. Grocery chains, which have finite shelf space, start to repurpose their stores (those they didn’t have to shut down, I should say) to sell more non-price-controlled items—everything from nutrition supplements to kitchenware to apparel—and less price-controlled food products. Your local Kroger or Safeway starts to look and feel more like a Walmart. 6. Food producers stop making products with lower margins. Grocery chain start competing with each other to secure inventory. Since they can’t compete by offering stronger prices (remember, producers aren’t allowed to raise prices here, and, even if they could, grocery chains no longer have the gross profit to bear price increases), they compete on things like payment terms. 7. Small grocery chains start to shut down entirely, or get sold to larger chains like Kroger. In addition to not being able to cover fixed costs, a major reason for this is because they can no longer reliably secure delivery of products, due to producers prioritizing sales to larger customers, which are able to leverage their stronger balance sheets to offer superior payment terms. 8. Smaller food producers—which typically sell via distributors, rather than directly to grocery chains—start to go out of business. Because these producers have an additional step their value chains, and because they have lower volumes over which to spread their fixed costs, their cost structure is inherently disadvantaged compared to major food producers. When grocery stores aren’t able to raise prices, cutting product costs becomes all the more important, and deprioritizing purchases from smaller producers is an easy way to do so. 9. As supply chains break down, lines start to form outside grocery stores every morning. Cities assign police officers to patrol store parking lots, and food producers draft contingency plans to assign armed escorts to delivery trucks. 10. The federal government announces a program to issue block grants for states to purchase and operate shuttered grocery stores. The USDA also seizes closed-down production facilities. 11. The government announces that prices for all key food costs—corn, wheat, cattle, energy, etc.—are also now fixed, to stop “profiteers” from gouging the now-government-operated food industry. 12. Shockingly, the government struggles to operate one of the most complex industries on the planet. The entire food supply chain starts imploding. 13. Communism, mass starvation, and the end of America quickly ensue. Hey wait a second
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If you don't get it yet, listen to this.
Why is RFK Jr. considering endorsing Trump? Because the DNC screwed him over, and Trump is the only one who’s sincere. Kennedy’s VP pick says, “We wanted to win. We wanted a fair shot. The DNC made that IMPOSSIBLE for us.” The “defenders of democracy” even went as far as to plant insiders into the Kennedy campaign “to disrupt it and to create actual legal issues for [them].” @NicoleShanahan laments: “I did not put in tens of millions of dollars to be a spoiler candidate. I put in tens of millions of dollars to win ... The DNC made that impossible for us.” Now, Shanahan says she’s “so disappointed” she ever helped Democrats, calling her involvement in helping them secure the majority in the Senate “one of the biggest mistakes of [her] life. “So, there’s two options that we’re looking at, and one is staying in, forming that new party. But we run the risk of a Kamala Harris and Walz presidency because we draw votes from Trump, or we draw somehow more votes from Trump, or we walk away right now and join forces with Donald Trump.”
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Matt Chamberlain retweeted
10 Aug 2024
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